Laga soo bilaabo sanadkii 2001kii, Basra ma nolaan karto hadaanay sheekada ku bilaabin sidan:
Qansa aka voltage aka hebel aka hebla etc.
Cilmiile aka ciil-kama kore isna kama ilbaxo sida:
Qofkasta oo jeberti ah wuxuu ku bilaabaa why do you hate boqortooyada MJ.
Haduu arko duriyadana wuxuu yidhaahdaa Micheal mariano wuxuu ahaa traitor.
Maantana isagoo pension ku jira ayuu la debate garaynayaa 17 years caruur ah.
Malaha wuxuu arkay inay dhalfoyahamiintii intoodii badnayd ka tageen forumka
Muuse Abokor = Michael Maryama Luuli and Dhoolayare
Maryama Luuli dirtiness is attested to by his name. Dhoolayare is the guy who welcome the British delegation with boards carrying the message: The Queen is our Mother.
In early February 2004, a delegation of British parliamentarians arrived in Hargeysa for a 24-hour visit to Somaliland. A splendid welcome was staged at the airport. About two hundred people filled the margins of the airstrip at nine in the morning. In anticipation of the arrival of the plane in two hours time, Foreign Minister Edna Aaden and Minister for Information Cabdullahi Maxamed Du’aale, assisted by some policemen and women, organised the show. Girls wearing dresses resembling traditional Somali women’s wear were put in line to the right and left of the estimated landing place. The traditional white of the dress was replaced by the green, white and red of the Somaliland flag. The girls started singing and dancing to the monotonous beat of their drums long before the arrival of the delegation.
In the centre stood a group of men consisting mostly of members of the bicameral Somaliland Parliament in which elders and representatives represent the clans and regions of Somaliland. A handful of World War II veterans decorated with British medals also took their positions. The scene was completed by the presence of John Drysdale, the oldest British resident of Somaliland, who has been involved in Somali affairs since colonial times. Among the participants masses of posters with the Somaliland flag and a picture of Queen Elisabeth II were distributed. The headline on the Queen’s poster was: ‘The Queen, our mother’. Some people held large banners with messages referring to the long-standing British-Somaliland friendship and to the recent history of Somaliland. Journalists swept the place photographing and filming the parade. In the background an armada of new four-wheel drives waited to take the VIPs to the city.
When the Parliamentarians arrived, Edna Aaden and the Minister for Information first received them. Some girls stepped forward and decorated the guests with wreaths of flowers. Following this Edna Aaden led the group along the masses, whilst the girls danced and sang and the men greeted the guests. Brief conversations were held with the members of the Somaliland parliament, the war veterans and of course, with John Drysdale. After fifteen minutes of shaking hands and posing for the cameras of the journalists, the guests together with the more important participants in the event were carried away by the waiting cars. Along the way to the city spectators had gathered shouting and gesticulating at every car that came from the airport. The police blocked the main roads in the centre of Hargeysa and only government vehicles were allowed to proceed.
The event was interesting with regard to which aspects of the Somaliland identity were presented and which were neglected. It was striking how openly the memory of the colonial past was revived. Looking at the scene one could almost think that Somaliland was still a British Protectorate, and indeed, British protection was strived after.
Cabdilaaahi Maxamed Ducaale = Dhoolayare, a Muuse Abokor guy even dirtier than Maykal Maryama Luuli. Hard to believe but truee
Among the participants masses of posters with the Somaliland flag and a picture of Queen Elisabeth II were distributed. The headline on the Queen’s poster was: ‘The Queen, our mother’. Some people held large banners with messages referring to the long-standing British-Somaliland friendship and to the recent history of Somaliland.